ChatterBank1 min ago
Living Off The Grid
16 Answers
I've been watching a lot of these programmes about people living in Alaska hundreds of miles from anywhere . Some of them on their own .
And the harsh conditions they endure during winter .
Would you live off the grid as above , if you had the chance ?
And the harsh conditions they endure during winter .
Would you live off the grid as above , if you had the chance ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.All the ones on face book take photos of their vans and where they are, but its always in the summer months an d the sun blazing. I have asked them what its like in the winter months, but no one answers. Many park up on pub car parks, providing they eat and drink in the pub, they can park for free???
Not seen these progs. Being off grid seems to have both advantages and disadvantages. One doesn't have to put up with other people, but on the other hand, when you need assistance it isn't there. I think a flavour of it whilst being able to stay in touch seems ok. Sat TV & Net would be nice. Otherwise how would you learn to live off grid ? And when the crops failed one would need a Miller & Carter nearby.
When I was growing up, my mother's favorite expression was, "It's all true where it happened." As a kid, that didn't mean much to me. Now that I've had a number of decades as an adult, I see (or hear) it in so many forms. The real "off the grid" is only for the very few. How many of us could really give up food from a store, drugs from a pharmacy, electricity, telephones, automatic heat? How many of us could do all the labor that's needed to support our life? How many of us give up an income that would enable us to live into our old age? The "crowd" would thin out pretty quickly.